Friday, May 4, 2012

Command-line arguments are typically
retrieved via a string array parameter passed to Main,
but the common way to define WPF applications doesn’t allow you to implement
the Main
method. You can get around this in two different ways. One way is to forego
defining an
Application-derived class in XAML, so you can manually define the Main method
with a
string array parameter. The easier way, however, is to simply call
System.Environment.GetCommandLineArgs at any point in your application, which
returns
the same string array you’d get inside Main.

Command-line arguments are typically
retrieved via a string array parameter passed to Main,
but the common way to define WPF applications doesn’t allow you to implement
the Main
method. You can get around this in two different ways. One way is to forego
defining an
Application-derived class in XAML, so you can manually define the Main method
with a
string array parameter. The easier way, however, is to simply call
System.Environment.GetCommandLineArgs at any point in your application, which
returns
the same string array you’d get inside Main.